NZXT Phantom review -
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At the top side we spot quite a few things. To the left we spot that huge 200mm fan, we see power on/reset buttons. Then Frontpanel I/O with one eSATA, two USB 2.0 ports and headphone/mic connectors.

At the other side, all the way to the right, we see a nice fan controller (yay). You'll have access to five fan configurations allowing them to spin at your preferred RPM. This is a great feature.

The lid on top can come off, allowing you to access the fan locations more easily.

Looking at the backside we are once again impressed. At the rear of the Phantom we see openings for the I/O panel, power supply and seven expansion slots. Nearby to the I/O panel opening is a 120mm exhaust fan with four rubber grommet covered liquid cooling holes (for tubing). Fairly identical to most modern enthusiast cases, this is a power supply on the bottom layout.

NZXT Phantom 630 reviewWe review the NZXT Phantom 630 Full tower PC chassis. Definitely gorgeous in many ways as the design is prolonging in what we have seen in the past year or two when NZXT released their first phantom chassis.

NZXT Phantom 820 reviewWe test and review the NZXT Phantom 820. Absolutely stunning in many ways as the design is simply great, the features are grand and then the extras still need to kick in. What about a fan controller connected to a plethora of pre-equipped fans

NZXT Phantom reviewWe review the NZXT Phantom. Absolutely stunning in many ways as the design is simply great, the features are grand and then the extras still need to kick in. What about a 5-fold fan controller connected to a plethora of pre-equipped fans? Yep, a fan controller in the chassis, something we have been requesting for years. The NZXT Phantom is a full tower case with an excess of room for just about anything you'd like to install in there.